xStormy16 ABI
************

!!!!! NOTE !!!!!
This document is a draft and is subject to change.
!!!!! NOTE !!!!!

This part of the file describes the conventions required to write
ELF object files that are link-compatible with the ones produced
by the GNU toolchains.

Bit and Byte Ordering
=====================

This implementation is little-endian.   Bits are numbered starting 
from 0 being the LSB.

In this document, 'word' means 16 bits.

Calling Sequence
================

The registers are allocated as follows:

Register	Purpose
-------------------------------------------------------------------
r0, r1          Call-volatile.  May be changed during the execution
                of a call instruction.
r2 through r7   Argument passing;  call-clobbered.
r8, r9		Call-volatile.  May be changed during the execution
		of a call instruction.
r10 through r13	Call-saved.
r14		Program status word.
r15		Stack pointer.


Scalar values are returned in register r2-r7 if the value fits.
Otherwise, a pointer is passed as a 'hidden' first argument and
the return value is placed there.

Arguments are passed in registers starting in r2, then on the stack.
Arguments of size not a multiple of a word are padded to whole words.
If an argument would otherwise be passed partially in registers, and
partially on the stack, the whole of it is passed on the stack.  The
last argument is pushed on the stack first.

After a procedure's arguments are pushed on the stack,
the return address is pushed on the stack, as if by the call
instruction.  The return address is on the top of the stack when
a procedure is called.

Objects whose size is a multiple of 16 bits are aligned to a 16-bit
boundary.

Pointers are 16 bits, referencing addresses between 0 and 0xFFFF.

Procedure pointers are also implemented as 16-bit pointers.

Variable Argument Functions
===========================

The C type 'va_list' is implemented as a structure, as follows:

struct {
  char *base;
  unsigned count;
}

Both fields are 16 bits.  An argument of size N bytes
(N will be even) is accessed as if by the following code:

char *result;
/* count = #bytes non-variable arguments */
/* 12 = #bytes for register arguments */
if (count + N > 12)
  {
    if (count < 12)
      count = 12;
    result = base - (count + N - 12 + 4);
  }
else
  {
    result = base + count;
  }
count += N;
/* The argument is at `*result'.  */


One implementation of this is if a variadic function first
pushes registers 2 through 7 in sequence at entry, and
sets 'base' to the address of the first word pushed, 
producing a stack that appears like:

SP ->
	[other data]
	r7
	r6
	r5
	r4
	r3
count->	r2
	Return address (two words)
	7th procedure parameter word
	8th procedure parameter word
	...
	last procedure parameter word

and initializes 'count' to be the number of bytes of non-variable
arguments to the function.

ELF File Format
===============

ELF file header
---------------

xStormy16 ELF files are distinguished by the value EM_XSTORMY16 in
the e_machine field of the ELF file header:

#define EM_XSTORMY16	        0xad45

DWARF Register Number Mapping
-----------------------------

Registers r0 through r15 are mapped to numbers 0 through 15.

Relocations
-----------

RELA relocs are used exclusively.  The relocation types defined are:

Name			Value	Field	Calculation	Overflow
----------------------------------------------------------------
R_XSTORMY16_NONE		0	none	none		none
R_XSTORMY16_32		1	32	S + A		none
R_XSTORMY16_16		2	16	S + A		unsigned
R_XSTORMY16_8		3	8	S + A		unsigned
R_XSTORMY16_PC32		4	32	S + A - P	none
R_XSTORMY16_PC16		5	16	S + A - P	signed
R_XSTORMY16_PC8		6	8	S + A - P	signed
R_XSTORMY16_REL_12	7	16:12:0	S + A - P	signed
R_XSTORMY16_24		8	32:23:1	(S + A) >> 1	unsigned
R_XSTORMY16_GNU_VTINHERIT 9	n/a	n/a		n/a
R_XSTORMY16_GNU_VTENTRY	10	n/a	n/a		n/a

In the 'Calculation' column, 'S' is the value of the symbol to which
the reloc refers, 'A' is the addend, and 'P' represents the place of
the storage unit being relocated.

In the 'Field' column, the first number indicates whether the
relocation refers to a byte, word or doubleword.  The second number,
if any, indicates the size of the bit-field into which the relocation
is to occur (and also the size for overflow checking).  The third
number indicates the first bit of the bit-field in the word or
doubleword, counting the LSB as bit 0.
